I usually finish what I've started, but if I adjourn part of the way through for long enough then I'm at risk of forgetting about it, unless it's something I'm scared of not completing, in which case it remains on my mind, nagging me until I go back to it. I'm generally rather averse to adjourning, and I suspect that's because I sense I might never get back to it. So in practice I'm probably quite good at following through, but with relatively unimportant things it's only because I don't usually take a break. And I usually hate the very idea of abandoning anything once I've got my teeth into it.
This article:
http://aspiewriter.com/2015/08/why-is-i ... goals.html
seems to have a rather different take on the matter, and frankly I don't know what to make of it. I don't recognise much of myself in there - I do have trouble resolving one sound out of a mixture, and I do have trouble formulating complex projects that consist of many sub-tasks, but they don't seem to be specifically to do with following through, they seem more to do with tasks and projects as a whole. Maybe that author isn't talking about the same problem as I am. So whose words are relevent to this thread - mine, hers, both, or neither?
I searched the Web for "autism and follow-through" but that was the nearest I got to a direct hit. "Autism and consistency" gave nothing relevent at all.